It is an unreliable source, as stated in Wiki.
""The Arab armies entered Palestine to protect the Palestinians from the Zionist tyranny but, instead, they abandoned them, forced them to emigrate and to leave their homeland, and threw them into prisons similar to the ghettos in which the Jews used to live in Eastern Europe, as if we were condemned to change places with them: they moved out of their ghettos and we occupied similar ones. The Arab States succeeded in scattering the Palestinian people and in destroying their unity
."[20][unreliable source?][21]"
Causes of the 1948 Palestinian exodus - Wikipedia the free encyclopedia
Wiki has nothing to do with it. It is a book written by Eric Sundquist a well known professor and dept. head at John's Hopkins, and approved and used by the Harvard University Press.
How about you **** off for a change, liar?
Eric Sundquist
Andrew W. Mellon Professor of the Humanities
Department Chair
Department of English
Johns Hopkins University
26 Gilman Hall
3400 N. Charles Street
Baltimore, MD 21218
Phone: (410) 516-1103
Email:
ejs@jhu.edu
Eric J. Sundquist teaches courses in American literature and culture, with special interests in African American literature, Jewish American literature, and the literature of the Holocaust. Before returning to Johns Hopkins, where he received his Ph.D. in 1978, he taught at Berkeley, Vanderbilt, UCLA, and Northwestern, where he was also Dean of the College of Arts and Sciences.
Professor Sundquist’s books include King’s Dream (2009); Strangers in the Land: Blacks, Jews, Post-Holocaust America (2005), which received the Weinberg Judaic Studies Institute Book Award; To Wake the Nations: Race in the Making of American Literature (1992), which received the Christian Gauss Award from Phi Beta Kappa and the James Russell Lowell Award from the Modern Language Association; The Hammers of Creation: Folk Culture in Modern African American Literature (1993); Faulkner: The House Divided (1985); and Home as Found: Authority and Genealogy in Nineteenth-Century American Literature (1979), which received the Gustave Arlt Award from the Council of Graduate Schools in the United States. He has edited essay collections devoted to Mark Twain, Ralph Ellison, Harriet Beecher Stowe, and W. E. B. Du Bois, and contributed to the Cambridge History of American Literature (reprinted as Empire and Slavery in American Literature, 1820-1865). He is a member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, and in 2007 was named a recipient of a Distinguished Achievement Award from the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation.
Strangers in the Land: Blacks, Jews, Post-Holocaust America
By Eric J Sundquist
Pages displayed by permission of Harvard University Press. Copyright.
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